A Letter-to-the-Editor
published in the September edition of the Remnant was written in a private
capacity. Mr. Matt’s editorial reply contained an inaccurate and unjust
reference to Ss. Peter & Paul Roman Catholic Mission that reflects disparagingly
upon our membership and the priests that have assisted us. This reply is
written in my capacity as the board director of this Mission in defense of our
Mission and to offer critical comments upon the editorial policy of The
Remnant which in the practical sphere constitutes an endorsement of the
“reform of the reform.”An edited form
of this letter was offered for publication in The Remnant.

David Drew

Chairman

Ss. Peter & Paul
Roman Catholic Mission

OCTOBER 2, 2008

Traditional
Catholicism and the Reform of the Reform

A
response to Mr. Michael Matt, editor of The Remnant

Mr. Matt:

Your editorial remarks to my
recent Letter-to-the-Editor entitled, The Remnant Endorsed
the Reform of the Reform?,ended by saying, “If all this makes us suspect traditionalists then indeed
I have no further use for a term that has so obviously lost any sense of its
original meaning.”The proper
definition of terms is the necessary foundation for true judgments and sound
reasoning.There are many kinds of
definitions but none better than an essential definition which gives the
proximate genus and the specific difference.Let me begin by offering an essential definition for both
Conservative and Traditional Catholics that will make any further discussion
fruitful.

St. Thomas distinguishes two
aspects to the virtue of Faith. The first is the interior
submission of the mind and will to the revelation of God on the authority of
God. The second is the exterior manifestation of this interior
assent. Both are necessary to the virtue of Faith without which, “it is
impossible to please God” (Heb. 11:6). For as St. Paul said, “For, with
the heart, we believe unto justice; but, with the mouth, confession is made unto
salvation” (Rom. 10:9-10). The “confession unto salvation,” the
“exterior” aspect of Faith is manifested by acts of the virtue of Religion,
which form the very heart of our Ecclesiastical Traditions.

Traditional Catholics and
Conservative Catholics belong to the genus that believes in the internal forum
all that God has revealed through His Son, Jesus Christ. They differ from one
another in the external forum regarding exactly how that faith is visibly
expressed.The Conservative Catholics
hold that the Ecclesiastical Traditions by which the faith is visibly
manifested in the external forum are purely accidental elements governed solely
as matters of Church discipline and subject to the free and independent will of
the legislator to which every Catholic is obliged to obey.

The Traditional Catholics reject
this position and hold that the ecclesiastical traditions are an essential and
integral component of our faith being wholly consonant with and the perfect
outward expression of our internal belief which we are morally obliged to
profess as our duty to God and thus they cannot be purely a matter of Church
discipline.Further, Traditional
Catholics recognize that for Obedience to be a virtue, it must be subject to
and governed by the virtue of Religion which is the principle subsidiary virtue
of the moral virtue of Justice.Traditional Catholics deny that any authority of whatever rank can
validly be used against the virtue of Religion.

A brief illustration can be seen
with communion in the hand.Rev. Guido Marini, Pope Benedict’s former
Master of Ceremonies, recently said, “It is necessary not to forget that
the distribution of Communion in the hand remains, even now, from the juridical standpoint, an indult from the universal law, conceded by
the Holy See to those bishops conferences which requested it.”Immemorial custom, which is
nothing more than the outward manifestation of received Tradition and itself is
the primary source and interpreter of law, has been legally codified that
Communion be received on the tongue.The
Conservative Catholic believes that the pope possesses the power and authority
to grant this indult.The Traditional
Catholic concedes that the pope possesses the power, but denies he has the
authority to do so because no one has the authority to grant a suspension in
custom and law that injures the faith in the True Presence and leads to
sacrilege.

You say that my calling Mr.
Anthony Mazzone a “Conservative Catholic” is a “hasty mischaracterization.”The evidence that you offer is that he
“was writing for The Remnant long before I knew
him” in the early 1980s and that you met him recently “at a Traditional Mass he attends regularly”
(emphasis yours).I was well
aware that Mr. Mazzone had written for The Remnant
in the early 1980s but that fact is immaterial to my referring to him as a
“conservative Catholic.” As for the “traditional Mass he attends regularly,” it
was either indult Mass or Mass granted by license of the local ordinary under
the stipulations of SummorumPontificum.The reason Mr. Mazzone
did not attend the traditional Mass without the permission of his local
ordinary is because he holds that the ecclesiastical traditions of our Church
are matters of discipline and that the legitimate exercise of authority can
outlaw their practice.Rather than
violate these prohibitions, he chose to raise his family in the Armenian
rite.

Mr. Mazzone
is a very personable gentleman with many admirable qualities as a Catholic
husband and father.He chose the best means
in his judgment to keep his family in the Catholic faith and for that he is to
be commended, but it would not be accurate to characterize these means as that
of a Traditional Catholic.If all
Traditional Catholics had followed the example of Mr. Mazzone
the immemorial Roman rite would now be extinct.Furthermore, if a future pope should again “outlaw” the “extraordinary
form of the Roman rite,” those who attend it by grant of indult or privilege
would cease to do so.Would Mr. Mazzone then return to the Armenian rite?

As for your justification of using
Mr. Peter Vere in the defense of Fr. Alphonse de Valk, or as you said, you “would
have done the same had the reporter been an atheist,” neither option was
necessary.A simply Internet search of
Fr. de Valk would have given you all the information
you needed for the purpose of writing a thorough article on the problem he is
facing with the Canadian judicial system.

St. Pius X in Pascendi
says "every society needs a directing authority to guide its members
toward the common end, to foster prudently the elements of cohesion, which in a
religious society are doctrine and worship. Hence the triple authority in
the Catholic Church, disciplinary, dogmatic and liturgical” (emphasis
his). Note that the purpose of the "directing authority" (i.e.
disciplinary, canon law) is to direct the Church "toward the common
end" which are "doctrine" (dogmatic) and "worship"(liturgical).Mr. Vere,
especially in his endorsement of his mentor, the former Rev. John Huels, and Huels’ canonical
opinion undermining of the rights of immemorial tradition, is on record of
having wholly corrupted canon law from its essential purpose and employed it as
a weapon to attack Traditional Catholics.This corruption of canon law is again manifested in Mr. Vere’s arguments supporting the canonical validity of the
excommunication of Archbishop Lefebvre and the bishops of the SSPX.Mr. Vere should not
have been given any standing in any Catholic publication for even if he should
ever express a correct canonical opinion it will not be for the right
reason.

Your reference to Ss. Peter & Paul Roman Catholic
Mission and implication that we “perhaps”
hold that “independent chapels are portholes to
eternal bliss” and “approved Mass centers
are direct conduits to the deepest pits of Hell” is nothing more than
calumny against myself, the members of our Mission and the many priests who
have helped us over the years.You go a
step further in the same paragraph quoting Abe George de Nantes saying that he
would prefer “to remain in cold and shame on the
threshold, rather than to take refuge in some synagogue of Satan of my own or
of someone else’s devising.”Your
implication that we are schismatics is clear and the
insult is made without a shred of supporting evidence.This is the same libel that Conservative
Catholics have leveled against Traditional Catholics for the last 40 years of
which The Remnant and its readers have often been the targets. Our
Mission purpose and statement of first principles as well as every letter from
Ss. Peter & Paul Roman Catholic Mission to our local ordinary and to Rome
are published on our web page (http://www.saintspeterandpaulrcm.com/).I challenge you to examine these documents
and produce evidence in support of your accusations or publish a
retraction.You have no grounds
whatsoever for having made this charge even in a speculative form.“A good name is better than great riches”
(Proverbs 22); slander is a far greater sin than theft.

Ss. Peter & Paul Roman
Catholic Mission is canonically a pious association of lay Catholics who
function in the manner of a confraternity to work for our own sanctification
and salvation by helping to restore the ecclesiastical traditions of the Roman
rite to our diocese. Our corporate purpose is fixed and very difficult to
change. It is fundamentally very simple: As Catholics we have by virtue
of our Baptism the infused character that empowers us to offer fitting worship
to God who is holy and commands us as our first duty to offer holy
worship. This duty imposed by God generates specific rights to each
Catholic. The worship of God in the external forum must wholly comport
with the doctrinal and moral truths of our Catholic Faith that we believe in
the internal forum because they have been revealed by God “who can neither
deceive nor be deceived.” This is the faith without which "it
is impossible to please God." The ecclesiastical traditions of our
Church, the most central of which is the immemorial Roman Rite of the Mass, are
the perfect outward expression of this holy Faith and no one, of whatever human
dignity, has the legitimate authority to deny any Catholic of these
rights. Further, while recognizing that rights can be duly regulated, we
hold that these rights can never be conditionally exercised in a manner
prejudicial to the Catholic Faith and that they are not grounded in the grant
of any indult or privilege granted by positive human law. This is our
claim that has been submitted to our local ordinary and to Rome asking for
their authoritative judgment.

Our Mission could have become an
Indult or have been regularized under the stipulations of SummorumPontificum but the price would have required our
silence when the local ordinary, for example, used the Catholic cathedral of
our diocese for the installation ceremony of a Lutheran “bishop,” or when he
attended a holocaust memorial service and told the Jewish audience that “there
is no Catholic campaign to convert the Jews.”We would have been required to have the Novus Ordo
offered in our chapel and to profess that it is the ordinary form of the one
Roman rite expressing a single “lexorandi, lexcredendi.”It would have required that our priest be
spiritually formed in the Novus Ordo and certified to
offer the “extraordinary form of the mass.”Before such a reliable priest was found for the Indult community in
Harrisburg, the sermons at their chapel given by priests of Fraternity of St.
Peter were recorded and vetted for ‘orthodoxy’ by the local ordinary.The Ecclesiastical Traditions of our Church,
the visible profession of our faith, cannot be conditionally exercised at the
price of our silence to sacrilege.

We are not blind to the benefits
that have been derived from SummorumPontificum.

In a letter to Bishop Kevin
Rhoades in July 2007 we said:

It is our hope that this MotuPropriowill be a first step in arresting this
precipitous decline for the glory of God and the salvation of souls, but ….This
MotuProprio
does not recognize or guarantee the right of any Catholic to the ecclesiastical
traditions of our Church and we cannot place a necessary element of our
Catholic faith in jeopardy by submitting it to the arbitrary will of an
authority that has abused its power time and again over the past forty years.

Again in a letter delivered to Bishop Rhoades in November 2007 we said:

It was nice to hear that Bishop Rhoades will
establish a traditional community in Harrisburg.I am pleased, very pleased with this development.The location of the Indult communities
throughout this country corresponds almost exactly with the location of
previously established traditional chapels.The traditional sacraments, administered in an esthetically beautiful
setting in a central location are being made available in Harrisburg because
they are available in York. This however is not the final end for which Ss.
Peter and Paul Roman Catholic Mission was constituted.

Nevertheless, we know full well that these benefits can be swept away
overnight because they are not established upon the rights of immemorial
tradition and they are not informed by the traditional Catholic faith.

I am glad, Mr. Matt, to hear you
say that The Remnant is not in support of the “reform of the reform,” but
I have not seen any evidence for it.SummorumPontificum
is about the reform of the reform.Cardinal Ratzinger wrote in 2003:

I believe, though, that in the long term
the Roman Church must have again a single Roman rite. The existence of two
official rites is for bishops and priests difficult to “manage” in practice.
The Roman rite of the future should be a single rite, celebrated in Latin or in
the vernacular, but standing completely in the tradition of the rite that has
been handed down. It could take up some new elements which have proven
themselves, like new feasts, some new prefaces in the Mass, an expanded
lectionary - more choice than earlier, but not too much, - an “oratiofidelium”, i.e., a fixed
litany of intercessions following the Oremus before
the offertory where it had its place earlier.

Cardinal Ratzinger
in a letter to Dr. Heinz-Lothar Barth, June 23, 2003

In SummorumPontificum, by establishing the myth of the one Roman
Rite in an “ordinary and extra-ordinary” form, the theological foundation is
created for the liturgical “hermeneutic of continuity.” For the last 40 years
those who invented, those who authorized, and those who implemented the Novus Ordo have all called it descriptively a “novusordo.” Now, in the deconstructionalist newspeak, a liturgical revisionism has
been created simply by changing the language. Now remains the problem for the
“reform of the reform” to create something substantial to hang on this myth.

The document is not liberating but, in fact, restrictive and no traditional
priest suffering unjust censorship was defended or relieved by its
publication.It ignores the rights of
immemorial tradition and treats the traditional Mass as purely a matter of
discipline.After acknowledging that the
1962 Missal was never illegal it then imposes conditions upon its use that
never existed.It permits the use of the
vernacular in the “readings,” the use of the Novus Ordo
calendar such as the recent translation of the feast of St. Joseph, and the
Novus Ordo prefaces referred to in SummorumPontificum
and added to the Ignatius Press missal under the authority of PCED, and lastly
the change in the Good Friday prayer for the conversion of the Jews which The
Remnant recommended that Traditional Catholics accept because in your
judgment it ‘contained nothing harmful to the faith.’The MotuProprio has been in force for a little over one
year!On the other side of the equation
we are seeing a correction of the most egregious abuses on the Novus Ordo such as the correction of many mistranslations.You cannot support SummorumPontificum and oppose the reform of the reform.

It is the faith that informs the
liturgy and there is no evidence that Rome has abandoned its modernist
convictions.Where is this reform of the
reform leading?At the recent World
Youth Day in Sydney in the crypt of St. Mary’s Cathedral, Pope Benedict
declared to an ecumenical assembly that, “The road
of ecumenism ultimately points towards a common celebration of the Eucharist…
we can be sure that a common Eucharist one day would only strengthen our
resolve to love and serve one another in imitation of our Lord.”The ecumenical movement has, the Pope observed,"reached a critical juncture.To move forward, we must continually ask God to renew our
minds with the Holy Spirit, Who speaks to us through the scriptures and guides
us into all truth. We must guard against any temptation to view doctrine as
divisive and hence an impediment to the seemingly more pressing and immediate
task of improving the world in which we live…. As ‘fellow citizens’ of the
‘household of God,’ Christians must work together to ensure that the edifice
stands strong so that others will be attracted to enter and discover the
treasures of grace within.”

So all schismatics
and heretics are “fellow citizens of the household of
God” that must have a “common celebration of the
Eucharist,” indifferent to doctrine and dedicated to “improving the world in which we live.” As each new
change is implemented in the “extra-ordinary” form of the one Roman rite, every
traditional Catholic will undergo a crisis of conscience as to whether that
particular change will constitute an unacceptable compromise of faith.Each change will produce a further fragmentation
of traditional Catholics until we are disorganized and isolated as we were in
the late 1960s and early 1970s when one of the few lights seen over a rather
bleak horizon was The Remnant.

In 1599, about 40 years after the
death of England’s Queen Mary, an odd deputation of Catholic secular clergy,
wearied from their protracted defense of the faith, went to Rome, with the
‘blessing’ of Anglican authorities and the approval of the Elizabethan
government, who sent along their own government spy, Dr. Cecil.The purpose of the mission was to seek from
the Pope a mitigation of the Catholic policies in England that were then in
conformity with the strict spirit and militancy of the Jesuit clergy who would
not compromise with the secular clergy.The last religious edict of Queen Elizabeth published in 1602 made a
radical distinction between Catholic secular clergy and Jesuit clergy.The latter were summarily executed while the
former were given time to possibly negotiate more lenient treatment.SummorumPontificumis asking for traditional Catholics to make,
in many respects, an analogous compromise, a softening of our position.My opinion is that this compromise will
eventually lead to a betrayal of the faith just as it did with the secular
clergy in England who began in all good will but ended very poorly.

You said in an email exchange that
you “want to fight the counterproductive
generalizations on both sides and encourage an undeclared alliance of all trads against the outright enemies of Christ.”But that is
not what you are doing.You are
identifying Conservative Catholics as “trads” simply
on the basis that they happen to attend an Indult mass while ignoring the
distinctive difference that separates them from Traditionalists. This “alliance” between Traditional and Conservative
Catholics can only be productive in a very limited sphere and is inherently
very dangerous because the Conservative Catholics will be the preponderant
members of any “alliance” and they, as they
have demonstrated time and again over the past forty years, will be willing to
make any accommodation of our Ecclesiastical Traditions to modernist
demands.That is why your father
separated himself from the Conservative Catholics at The Wanderer.

You further said, “The MP is a means to an end, therefore, it cannot possibly
be the end itself. And our strategy is to try to use it despite that. Disagree
with me, if you like (and I’m sure you do); scream that’s impossible, if you’ve
a mind-- but don’t resort to cheap shots about our love affair with the reform
of the reform.”Well, the means
are not unrelated to the ends. You cannot board a plane for Chicago and
complain about not arriving in New York.The means of the MotuProprio require accepting presuppositions antithetical
to traditional Catholicism, and traditional Catholics will have no say at all
in the direction of any liturgical reform that will be implemented in an
atmosphere of general apostasy within the Church.If support for SummorumPontificum is done in an uncritical manner it
presents a very great danger to traditional Catholics and will undermine our
defense of the faith.

It is well to recall the words
of St. Pius X regarding the standing of our Ecclesiastical Traditions:

They (the modernists) exercise
all their ingenuity in an effort to weaken the force and falsify the character
of Tradition, so as to rob it of all its weight and authority. But for
Catholics nothing will remove the authority of the Second Council of Nicea, where it condemns those `who dare, after the impious
fashion of heretics, to deride the ecclesiastical traditions, to invent
novelties of some kind.... or endeavor by malice or craft to overthrow any one
of the legitimate traditions of the Catholic Church'; nor that of the
declaration of the Fourth Council of Constantinople: `We therefore profess to
preserve and guard the rules bequeathed to the Holy Catholic and Apostolic
Church, by the Holy and most illustrious Apostles, by the orthodox Councils,
both general and local, and by every one of those divine interpreters, the
Fathers and Doctors of the Church.Wherefore
the Roman Pontiffs, Pius IV and Pius IX ordered the insertion in the profession
of faith of the following declaration: “I most firmly admit and embrace the
apostolic and ecclesiastical traditions and other observances and constitutions
of the Church.”

PascendiDominidGregis

Finally, Mr. Matt, your
implication of schism, that the members of Ss. Peter & Paul Roman Catholic
Mission, rather than “start their own church or
elect their own pope,” should follow the example of Jesus Christ in His
obedience to the “corrupt authority of his day even
unto death,” is grounded in an utterly false analogy.Jesus Christ never violated the virtue of
religion by obedience to a corrupted authority.Your argument would require the man born blind to deny Christ in
obedience to the “corrupt authority of his day”
rather than suffer the expulsion from the Temple.

Only by the militant defense of
our Ecclesiastical Traditions without compromise, which are not nor could ever
be a simple matter of pure discipline, will we in the end be able to defend the
faith.So I end where I started.You said with regard to the term ‘traditional
Catholic’, “…I have no further use for a term that
has so obviously lost any sense of its original meaning.”I do not think that it has lost any of its “original meaning,” but what began as an imprecise
sense of something being terribly wrong has undergone a refinement in clarity
and comprehension.If this “refinement”
finds The Remnant no longer standing with Traditional Catholics then it
no longer has a reason for publication.

David Drew

Chairman

Ss. Peter & Paul Roman
Catholic Mission

York, PA

The Remnant Endorsed the
Reform of the Reform?

Published in The Remnant,
September 2008

Dear Mr. Matt,

The final Mass at WYD is
nothing more than the “reform of the reform” from the other direction.This is the position that the Remnant has
endorsed editorially and now you can do nothing more than lobby for a version
of the new and improved Roman rite that meets your personal tastes.

Mr. Anthony Mazzone,
who I have known since 1985, is not and has never been a traditional Catholic.He is conservative Catholic.He and his wife Janice raised their family in
the Armenian rite and none of their children attended the traditional Latin
Mass even though they lived only 15 minutes from St. Jude in Philadelphia.Anthony is writing for the Remnant because
the Remnant has abandoned the defense of the traditional liturgy and now
endorses the “reform of the reform.”

In the last issue of the
Remnant you featured an article by Mr. Peter Vere.Mr. Vere has
distinguished himself over the past several years as one with a particular
interest in trying to recruit neo-Catholics from traditional Catholic
circles.He is particularly famous for
his fulsome endorsement of Rev. John Huels and his
canonical opinion that the codification of the immemorial Roman rite by Quo Primum destroyed any claim to the use of the rite
independent of any grant of indult.Shortly after this publication, Rev. Huels was
exposed as a homosexual priest-predator and was laicized.He is currently being rehabilitated as a canonical
expert and is back on the lecture circuit.

Leading
Canonist and Liturgical Scholar Renders Canonical OpinionRegarding The Use Of The
Tridentine Rite Without Indult

Fr. John Huels’
reputation as a leading canonist and a liturgical scholar needs no
introduction. Speaking as one of Fr. Huels’ former
students, I am indebted to him for much of what I know about canon law. Thus it
is with great joy that I write a brief introduction to the following piece.

Over the past year, many have asked me
to address the questions concerning the Ecclesia Dei indult. In response to
these requests, I initially set out to research and write a canonical opinion
refuting many of the errors circulating on this topic. Before I could finish,
however, Fr. Huels sent me the following canonical
opinion he wrote for the 2001 edition of CLSA Advisory Opinions.

Fr. Huels writes with a scholarly precision, a canonical
insight and a clarity of thought I may never master in my own canonical
writings. There is nothing I can either add or dispute in his following
canonical opinion. Therefore, rather than draft my own response to the
questions posed, I opted to present Fr. Huels’
canonical opinion – permission for which I thank Fr. Huels
and the Canon Law Society of America. Apart from filling in the canonical
short-form employed by canonists when writing for canonical publications (ie. changing “c.” to “canon” and “CIC 83” to “1983 Code of
Canon Law”), the entire text to Fr. Huels’ canonical
opinion is reprinted as it appears in Roman Replies and CLSA Opinions 2001.
----- Peter Vere, JCL

You are known by the company
you keep, and the company you are keeping are not traditional Catholics.

The liturgy is determined by
the faith and nothing has been done to correct the heresies that have given us
the Novus Ordo. Msgr. Gamber's said, "Liturgy and faith are interdependent. That is why a
new rite was created, a rite that in many ways reflects the bias of the new
(modernist) theology”. Now you are endorsing the “reform of the reform,”
a recasting of the traditional Mass during a time of general apostasy.The consequences of this will be a complete
fragmentation of the traditional movement and a recasting of the liturgy in a
conservative manner that will be acceptable to neo-Catholic and modernist
alike.

I would
think that Cardinal Hoyos was more pleased to have
his picture taken with you than you were with him.

David Drew

York, PA

Thank
you, Mr. Drew,

I’m
afraid I must disagree with your mischaracterization of Anthony Mazzone, who, by the way, was writing for The Remnant long
before you knew him.The hastiness of
your judgment against him is evidenced by a quick glance at editions of The
Remnant from as far back as the early 1980s.Mr. Mazzone’s byline is not difficult to
find.The November 30, 1981 issues, for
example, features a front page article by Anthony Mazzone
called “An Advent Meditation.”He was,
in fact, introduced to my father by Michael Davies and had been working for The
Remnant long before I came on the scene. So much for the conspiracy theory!

A
year or so ago while visiting friends near Havertown, PA, I ran into Mr. Mazzone at the Traditional Mass he attends
regularly.So, I’m really not sure what
you’re getting at there, either.

As
for Mr. Vere, again my reply is by necessity a
statement of the obvious.In his Remnant
article, Mr. Vere was perfectly forthcoming with the
details of his longstanding dispute with traditional Catholics in general and
The Remnant in particular.He made no
claim to be a traditionalist.He was
simply trying to garner support for an elderly priest facing jail in Canada for
preaching the Gospel.Remnant readers
certainly don’t require an explanation from me as to why it would be incumbent
on any Catholic editor at a time like this to help spread the word about the
plight of Fr. De Valk.I would have done the same had the reporter
been an atheist.

Perhaps
there’s something else at issue here.By
supporting SummorumPontificum,
are we now perceived as enemies of your independent chapel (Sts. Peter &
Paul)?Perhaps you’d like The Remnant to
declare that, while all independent chapels are portholes to eternal bliss,
approved Masses centers are directed conduits to the deepest pits of Hell.That approach has never been our, and from
its founding The Remnant has always counted itself among the ‘loyal
opposition’, even when serious disagreements with Church leaders left us out in
the cold.“It is my deliberate determination,”
wrote the Abbe George de Nantes in an article in The
Remnant in 1985, “to have the last place in the House of the Lord, even, should
I be thrown out, to remain in cold and shame on the threshold, rather than to
take refuge in some synagogue of Satan of my own or of someone else’s
devising.” Indeed!

We
have consistently encouraged our readers to guard against the temptation to
abandon the only true Church founded by Our Lord in favor of a mythical “true
Church” in some traditionalist enclave with precious little regard for the
hierarchical structure of the Church Christ founded.

As
for The Remnant’s alleged “change of heart” and endorsement of the so-called
“reform of the reform”, again, Remnant readers know this to be absolute
rubbish!I have never endorsed the
“reform of the reform” and nor did my father when he was among the first
traditional Catholics to support Pope John Paul’s motuproprio, Quattuoradhincannnos.That MP was issued in 1984 - the very year my
father successfully lobbied Archbishop John R. Roach here in St. Paul to allow
a Traditional Mass on a weekly basis, one of the first in the country.

In
a January 31, 1985 editorial, my father, Walter L. Matt, wrote: “In our
opinion, we must all work and pray very hard that the groundwork for such an
ardently longed-for outcome will be laid in Rome… We must, moreover, work and
pray very hard for Pipe John Paul II, as well as His Eminence Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, and also the Most Rev. Augustin
Mayer, extending your wholehearted support and encouragement in their present
endeavor to restore the church to sanity and sanctity.”

“….
If Pope John Paul II, by issuing the Indult,” wrote my father, “did indeed
drive the first nail, as Fr. Crane puts it, into the coffin of progressivist hopes for building up a man-made,
man-centered ‘new Church’ manipulated by themselves, then for his courageous
Indult the Pope ‘deserves our thanks and our unceasing prayers.’We hope and pray that the bishops, too, will
have learned by now how important the papal Indult really was and is, and then
proceed to support it accordingly!”

This
sort of lay support for a tradition-leaning papal initiative – what some would
call a “table scrap” – is absolutely in line with the long established
traditional Catholic strategy carved out by the pioneers of this movement -
Archbishop Lefebvre, Michael Davies, Walter Matt, etc.It was in this same tradition that Bishop
Bernard Fellay of the Society of St. Pius X organized
a drive to have one million rosaries prayed in thanksgiving for SummorumPontificum.He disagrees with the Pope on some
important matters, yes, but he is also subject to him and thus eager to prove
his loyalty wherever he can, precisely as a loyal son of the Church
should!This is the Catholic thing to
do!

The
Remnant has not changed.The Remnant
will never change, so long as I’m its editor.We fight for Tradition wherever and whenever we can, but we will never
start our own Church or elect our own Pope for “all the right reasons”.Christ was obedient to the corrupt authority
of His day even unto death – and He was God.Who are we, then, to take the law into our
own hands when He didn’t?If all this
makes us suspect traditionalists then indeed I have no further use for a term
that has so obviously lost any sense of its original meaning.

I
appreciate your letter but beg you to prayerfully reconsider your position.